PROFESSIONAL GROWTH

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And be sure to browse the excellent career advice offered by legendary Artist Manager Edna Landau in her Ask Edna blog and the entertainment law experts in their Law and Disorder blog.

Scholarships and Grants

Musical America routinely updates the list of scholarships and grants in an effort to keep current and ensure opportunities for musicians. If you know of a scholarship or grant not mentioned in our lists, please send us a message.

Edna Landau—doyenne of the music business, long-time managing director of IMG Artists and director of career development at the Colburn Conservatory of Music in Los Angeles—writes Ask Edna exclusively for MusicalAmerica.com to provide invaluable advice to music students and young professional artists. Read more about Edna’s impact on the performing arts.

Send your questions to Edna Landau at AskEdna@MusicalAmerica.com and she’ll answer through Ask Edna. Click the links below to read Edna’s recent columns on the critical aspects of launching and managing and professional music career.

During Edna’s 23 years as managing director of IMG Artists, she personally looked after the career of violinist, Itzhak Perlman and launched the careers of musicians such as pianists Evgeny Kissin and Lang Lang, violinist Hilary Hahn, and conductors Franz Welser-Mõst and Alan Gilbert.

Edna believes young musicians can grow their own careers, with “hard work, blind faith, passion for the cause, incessant networking and a vision that refuse[s] to be tarnished by naysayers.”

MA 30 Movers & Shapers: Elena Dubinets

As vice president of artistic planning at the Seattle Symphony since 2006 and a musicologist completing her fifth book, Elena Dubinets sits at the intersection of scholarship and orchestra management. She has presided over the commissioning of about 50 new works in Seattle, such as Become Ocean, the John Luther Adams tone poem on global warming and rising waters that won the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for music and a Grammy Award for the orchestra’s recording of its premiere. Other commissioned composers include Anna Clyne, Giya Kancheli, Du Yun, Michael Gordon, David Lang, Mason Bates, Agata Zubel, and Nico Muhly.

“As a musicologist, my primary field is contemporary music,” says Dubinets, who works closely with Music Director Ludovic Morlot. “I know quite a few composers all over the world and have a lot of experience working with them. We typically come to a joint decision about which composers would fit our program and start working with them, identifying exact parameters for a piece, including length and a timeline for submission of the score and parts for each musician. We never dictate anything besides approximate length and instrumentation, because we want composers to create their own work.”

Dubinets has made a specialty of studying Russian émigré musicians. Her forthcoming book is Joining the World: The Musical Migration from the Former USSR. In 2014 she organized a conference co-hosted by the Seattle Symphony and the University of Washington (where she teaches) on the subject. The conference accompanied an all-Russian program by the orchestra featuring the U.S. premiere of Night Butterflies, a piano concerto by Alexander Raskatov, who left Russia in the early 1990s.

“There’s certainly no single style that you can point to when speaking of Russian composers in exile,” said Dubinets, an émigré herself who has a doctorate from the Moscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory and has lived in the United States since 1996. “Each composer decides on his or her own how and when they want to relate to Russia musically.”